Tuesday, October 29, 2019

PA Ed Policy Roundup for Oct. 29: Aument/Topper legislation would break ground and make PA the first state to include poverty as a factor in teacher evaluations


Started in November 2010, daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now reach more than 4050 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors, administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's staff, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, Wolf education transition team members, superintendents, school solicitors, principals, charter school leaders, PTO/PTA officers, parent advocates, teacher leaders, business leaders, faith-based organizations, labor organizations, education professors, members of the press and a broad array of P-16 regulatory agencies, professional associations and education advocacy organizations via emails, website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn.

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PA Ed Policy Roundup for Oct. 29, 2019


Educators testify they're mostly happy with Aument's remedies to teacher evaluation problems
Lancaster Online by GILLIAN McGOLDRICK | Staff Writer October 29, 2019
Lawmakers “very seldom get it perfect” the first time around, said Rep. Jesse Topper, a Bedford County Republican. That’s why Sen. Ryan Aument, R-Mount Joy, and Topper each introduced legislation to break ground and make Pennsylvania the first state to include poverty as a factor in teacher evaluations. The state House Education Committee held a hearing about Senate Bill 751, which would overhaul individual teacher evaluations by lessening the emphasis on standardized testing and increasing the weight of classroom observations. Teacher evaluations last changed in 2012, with help from Aument. But there was a problem: Good teachers in low-performing schools received lower scores, and teachers at higher performing schools received artificially inflated scores, just because their schools performed better on standardized testing, Aument said Monday. Under the 2012 law, teachers were evaluated 50% based on administrator observations, 15% on building data like graduation rate and AP course participation, 15% on student performance on assessments and 20% on district-designed measures. It didn’t include a measure to include the impact of poverty on student success. “I was wrong then, and I’ve seen (the law) serves as a barrier for high quality educators,” Aument said. Both Aument and Topper testified before the House Education Committee, asking the panel of lawmakers to pass their legislation out of committee and bring it to the floor for a vote.

What to know about Gov. Wolf’s charter school reform plans
Philadelphia Metro By Staff Published : October 28, 2019
Things are getting a bit heated in Pennsylvania's charter school scene. In August, Gov. Tom Wolf ruffled a few feathers when he announced plans to make sweeping reforms to the Commonwealth’s “flawed and outdated charter school law.” “Pennsylvania’s charter school law is unfair for students, parents, school districts, and taxpayers,” Gov. Wolf said in a release. “While many charter schools are succeeding, others, especially some cyber charter schools, are underperforming and we are not doing enough to hold them accountable to the taxpaying public and the children they serve.” Charter school supporters, meanwhile, have taken issue with some of the governor’s proposed plans, saying that his reforms will harm families by limiting their options when it comes to school choice. Critics of Gov. Wolf also believe that his claims of calling these types of schools “private” are disingenuous, as charter schools are publicly funded. As the battle over charter schools continues, here’s what to know about Gov. Wolf’s plans for reform.

‘It’s not safe for kids to be in this school’: North Philadelphia parents demand answers about asbestos
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham, Updated: October 28, 2019- 4:44 PM
Jesse Stanton kept his two children at home Monday. Until there are answers from the Philadelphia School District, he said, he doesn’t want to risk his children being exposed to asbestos at Thomas M. Peirce Elementary. “My kids said, ‘Why can’t we go to school?’ and I said, ‘I don’t want you to get cancer 10, 20 years from now,’” Stanton said outside the North Philadelphia schoolyard. Stanton stood with parents from around the city to demand answers from the district, which they feel waited too long to address asbestos found at the school. The Philadelphia Federation of Teachers’ environmental expert flagged damaged asbestos at Peirce in mid-September. The school system did not send a crew to examine Peirce for asbestos until The Inquirer began asking questions last week. District officials were already under fire for their mishandling of asbestos contamination during construction at the shared Benjamin Franklin High School-Science Leadership Academy campus, resulting in the abrupt closure of the building and the relocation of nearly 1,000 students. A district spokesperson said Monday afternoon that the district attempts to follow up on asbestos reports within 72 hours, but that Peirce was not addressed more quickly because “we did not have the capacity to do so for this location” given the involved projects at several other schools.

Enough kids to open a day care: Activists push anew to shut down Berks detention center
Inquirer by Jeff Gammage, Updated: October 29, 2019- 5:00 AM
The Berks County detention center now holds enough children to fill a day-care center. Two 1-year-olds. Two 2-year-olds. Two 3-year-olds. There are also a 4-year-old and two 6-year-olds, according to the legal nonprofit group that represents undocumented immigrant families held there. Seven other children are between ages 7 and 10, and seven more range from ages 11 to 16.  “Detention for kids is wrong, no matter the age,” said Bridget Cambria, a lawyer with ALDEA–the People’s Justice Center. The 96-bed center in Leesport, about 75 miles northwest of Philadelphia, has long been assailed by critics as a “baby jail." The Berks County Residential Center drew international attention this month for holding a 3-month-old boy in what his mother described as filthy and frigid conditions. The British mother, husband, and son were arrested after what they said was a wrong turn at the Canadian border, and subsequently deported by federal immigration authorities who said they had deliberately crossed into the United States. The attention came as the population at Berks has surged, and the pressure of pending local and national elections offers leverage to activists who demand the center’s closure.

SB850 would create a Community Integrated School for Success Pilot Program
SB850 is being considered by the Senate Ed Committee this morning
Sponsored by Senator Wayne Langerholc, Jr. and Sen. Patrick M. Browne
Here’s the cosponsorship memo:
In the near future, we plan to introduce legislation to establish the Community Integrated Schools for Success pilot program. The goal of the program is to better support the needs of our students by integrating community-based services into our schools. A recent hearing of the Senate Education Committee highlighted how several programs led by innovative and creative thinkers can have a tremendous impact on our students. The approach used by these schools connect students and their families with community-based organizations that address both academic and nonacademic barriers to learning. By providing these programs at the school, physical and behavioral health resources, in addition to basic needs such as food and clothing, can be provided to students quicker. We would like to expand this success to more schools in this Commonwealth. Specifically, this legislation creates a pilot program, where schools can be designated as a Community Integrated School by the Secretary of Education. The school will then appoint a program manager to implement a community integration plan and to serve as the point of contact to facilitate the relationship between the school and community.

Funds available to improve school’s access to local food
Lewistown Sentinel OCT 28, 2019
PHILADELPHIA– Last week, Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding joined Fox Chase Elementary students for lunch during their third annual PA Preferred® Day. There, Redding announced the availability of $500,000 through the PA Farm Bill’s Farm to School Grant Program for Pennsylvania elementary schools to improve access to healthy, local foods and increase agriculture education opportunities for pre-kindergarten through fifth grade. “Jumpstarting an interest in agriculture can be as easy as improving childhood access to nutritious, local foods,” said Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding. “This Farm to School Program is planting seeds in the minds of our youngest Pennsylvanians about opportunities available through agriculture.” A result of Gov. Tom Wolf’s Pennsylvania Farm Bill, signed in July of this year, the Farm to School Grant Program aims to enrich the connection communities have with fresh, healthy food and local producers by changing food purchasing and education practices at schools and early childhood education sites.

Teenagers need to start school later, but school districts should work together toward solution [opinion]
Lancaster Online Editorial by THE LNP EDITORIAL BOARD October 29, 2019
THE ISSUE: The Pennsylvania General Assembly released a report this month titled “Sleep Deprivation in Adolescents: The Case for Delaying Secondary School Start Times.” The report, by a committee of educators, health professionals, transportation administrators, parents and students, calls sleep deprivation among teenagers a “public health crisis of epidemic proportions,” LNP’s Alex Geli reported Friday, Oct. 25. And it concludes that schools could help address the crisis by moving secondary school start times to 8:30 a.m. or later. We agree. Sleep deprivation is a serious issue for our teenagers. And it makes sense that an answer might involve starting the school day later. But this is a complex issue. There are myriad interlocking pieces for families, businesses and communities related to the schedule of a school day. And so we believe careful examination of this issue is needed in Lancaster County. And that it might be best if some of our school districts join forces on that research. One thing we find unfortunate in this discussion, however, is that some people believe sleep deficiency is a self-created problem that exists because of undisciplined teenagers and/or parents. Some say teens aren’t as hardy as the “old days.” Or that parents let electronic devices rule their kids’ lives. “Our society is raising wimps,” stated one commenter 

How did your child’s school perform on state exams? You can find out here
Results of the 2019 Keystone Exams and Pennsylvania System of School Assessment tests were recently released.
Penn Live By Teresa Bonner | tbonner@pennlive.com and Megan Lavey-Heaton | mheaton@pennlive.com Updated 11:31 AM; October 28, 2019
 (Note: Those viewing this article through the PennLive app should click here to be able to see the databases. Please note that those on smaller phones may want to view this article in landscape mode.) The state Department of Education has released school by school results of the 2019 Keystone Exams and the 2019 Pennsylvania System of School Assessment tests. PennLive has organized the results into two searchable databases, which you’ll find below. It allows you to see how any public school in the state performed on either of the two exams.  The Keystone Exams and the PSSAs are both part of the state’s schools accountability system, required under the federal Every Student Succeeds Act. PSSAs are administered in grades 3 through 8 for both English Language Arts and Math; and grades 4 and 8 in Science. The Keystone Exams are end-of-course assessments in Literature, Biology, and Algebra I.

Centre County kids are benefiting from increased pre-K funding, but statewide gaps still exist
Centre Daily Times BY MARLEY PARISH OCTOBER 28, 2019 11:09 AM, UPDATED OCTOBER 28, 2019 11:09 AM
FERGUSON TOWNSHIP - With help from a boost in state funding, what used to be empty space at the Learning Station is now home to a classroom for 3- and 4-year-olds who receive what director Lynda Mussi calls an “authentic” and high-quality early educational experience. The increase in pre-K funding in the 2019-20 state budget — a total of $30 million in additional funding for Pre-K Counts and Head Start Supplemental Assistance programs — led to the 3035 Enterprise Drive school receiving a $157,000 grant to create a classroom for up to 20 additional 3- and 4-year-olds. But while Learning Station has seen a direct benefit from the increased state funding, statewide gaps in pre-K education still exist. In Pennsylvania, 56% of eligible children — 97,702 — do not have access to high-quality pre-K programs, according to Pre-K for PA. Out of the 3,019 pre-K locations eligible to participate, an additional 4,885 pre-K classrooms are still needed to reach Pre-K for PA’s 2022 goal.

Quakertown School District to join in lawsuit against vaping product makers
The Quakertown Community School District has authorized attorneys to prepare litigation against makers and marketers of e-cigarettes and vaping products.
Doylestown Intelligencer By Chris English Posted at 4:32 PM
Quakertown Community School District officials said vaping at the high school is a serious problem. The Quakertown Community school board has authorized attorneys to prepare litigation that would join the district with other plaintiffs in suing companies that manufacture and market electronic cigarettes and vaping products. School district officials said the timeline for filing the lawsuit isn’t yet determined. But like officials in many districts across the country, they said that vaping among students has become a serious problem. “We haven’t even scratched the surface of the damage these things are doing to our kids,” school board member Keith Micucci said in a recent article on the school district website, qcsd.org. “From a health care perspective, we know it’s leading to acute respiratory distress syndrome. I really feel strongly that these are marketed toward our most vulnerable population, which are our teenage students who are trying to figure out their way in the world.” Quakertown Superintendent Bill Harner said the number of high school students who have vaped has increased dramatically, though officials did not have specific numbers. He said a student who recently became unconscious immediately after vaping in a bathroom stall with other students was taken from the high school by ambulance.

McKeesport Area approved for flexible learning days
Post-Gazette by DEANA CARPENTER OCT 28, 2019 6:31 PM
The McKeesport Area School District’s application to the state Department of Education for flexible learning days was approved and the district will be using its five days in the event of bitterly cold weather. The flexible learning days were passed in Pennsylvania as part of Act 64 earlier this year and enable students to be able to complete their studies from home in the event that school is cancelled. Superintendent Mark Holtzman said the district has up to five flexible learning days to use for the school year. “It’s going to be use specifically for those cold weather days,” when the temperatures fall below zero, but the teachers can still report to school, Mr. Holtzman said. He said students will be provided with materials so they can complete their studies at home.

Activists call on Pittsburgh Public Schools to extend suspension ban up to 5th grade
Trib Live by NATASHA LINDSTROM   | Monday, October 28, 2019 11:07 p.m.
Pittsburgh Public Schools should extend the district’s suspension ban for nonviolent offenses to apply to students in third through fifth grades, a group of education advocates said Monday night. “We understand that suspensions don’t work, they don’t change the behavior, and kids are actually missing critical learning time by not being in the classroom,” said Angel Gober, Western Pennsylvania organizing director for One Pennsylvania, a statewide social justice advocacy organization. Gober was among several speakers at a peaceful rally outside the district’s headquarters in Pittsburgh’s Oakland neighborhood before a non-voting school board meeting. The group of activists, teachers, parents with young children and legal advocates held signs such as “Counseling not cops,” “Solutions, not suspensions,” and “Stop criminalizing kids.” They called on the nine-member school board to do two things: expand the suspension ban, which currently is in place only for students in preschool through second grade; and listen to community input as the district negotiates a new, 10-year agreement with Pittsburgh police.

Erie student group puts climate change on its radar
GoErie By Kevin Flowers Posted at 5:58 AM Updated at 6:04 AM
The Erie County Student Coalition, which has been vocal about gun violence, is now making the environment and climate change a major focus. When Greta Thunberg garnered both applause and criticism internationally, Lauren Seliga and Tricia Rinderle paid attention. Thunberg is the 16-year-old Swedish climate activist who has been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. She generated worldwide headlines in September when she admonished world leaders for not taking drastic action to avert climate change’s worst effects and warned that her generation would face environmental catastrophes if things don’t change. Some critics lashed back at Thunberg, citing her age and even her Aspberger’s Syndrome diagnosis as a way to discredit her. The coalition made headlines in May 2018 when its members successfully pushed for an in-person meeting with U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, of Butler, R-16th Dist., at his Erie office in the wake the Feb. 14, 2018, school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in which 17 people were killed. The group also helped organize events at their schools to protest gun violence, and participated in the March for Our Lives rally in Washington, D.C., in March 2018.

Pa. state commission postpones vote on controversial school mascot
WHYY By Aaron Moselle October 28, 2019
An expected vote by the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission to decide whether the Neshaminy School District can continue calling some of its sports teams 'The Redskins' has been delayed until November.
It’ll be another month before the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission votes on the fate of a controversial school mascot in Bucks County. The PHRC was expected to announce its decision on Monday. The highly-anticipated vote is now scheduled for Nov. 25. The commission said that it postponed the decision to give itself more time to review the matter. It wrapped up public hearings on the matter in January. At issue is whether the Neshaminy School District can continue calling some of its sports teams “The Redskins,” a term the commission says is a racial slur for Native Americans. The commission also argues the nickname creates a “hostile educational environment” for district students. The district, home to more than 9,400 students, has denied the commission’s allegations, calling them “unfounded.” The debate over the decades-old mascot has been kicking around for six years.


How a lawsuit over Detroit schools could have an ‘earth-shattering’ impact
“Every school in the country would be affected,” one expert said. “There could be a lot of litigation.”
NBC News By Erin Einhorn Oct. 28, 2019, 5:06 PM EDT
After two years of struggling to pass any of his community college classes, Jamarria Hall, 19, knows this for certain: His high school did not prepare him. The four years he spent at Detroit’s Osborn High School were “a big waste of time,” he said, recalling 11th and 12th grade English classes where students were taught from materials labeled for third or fourth graders, and where long-term substitutes showed movies instead of teaching. What’s less certain, however, is whether Hall's education in Detroit’s long-troubled school district was so awful, so insufficient, that it violated his constitutional rights. That’s the question now before a federal appeals court that heard arguments last week in one of two cases that experts say could have sweeping implications for schools across the country. The cases, now snaking their way through the federal courts, could yield “enormous, almost earth-shattering change in terms of educational funding and educational opportunity,” said Derek Black, a law professor at the University of South Carolina whose research has focused on educational rights and constitutional law.

Children are the losers in Elizabeth Warren’s plan for charter schools
Washington Post By Editorial Board Oct. 28, 2019 at 7:08 p.m. EDT
“I HAVE a plan” is the battle cry of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.) as she campaigns for the Democratic presidential nomination. She has laid out a series of detailed policies that challenge what she sees as powerful interests standing in the way of better lives for Americans. But when it comes to education, Ms. Warren has a plan that seems aimed more at winning the support of the powerful teachers unions than in advancing policies that would help improve student learning. As part of a comprehensive K-12 education plan recently released, Ms. Warren took a page from the union playbook in calling for a clampdown on public charter schools. In addition to banning for-profit charter schools (which make up about 15 percent of the sector), she would subject existing charters to more scrutiny and red tape and make it harder for new charters to open by ending federal start-up funding and allowing only local school districts to authorize charter schools. Other parts of the union-pleasing plan: an end to rigorous testing for all children to measure whether they are in fact learning.


Register now for PSBA’s Sleep & Student Performance Webcast OCT 31, 2019 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
POSTED ON SEPTEMBER 27, 2019 IN PSBA NEWS
Our students face many issues today, but who would have imagined sleep deprivation could be a significant issue? The Joint State Government Commission established an advisory committee to study the issues, benefits and options related to school districts instituting later start times in secondary schools. Register now to hear from the executive director of the Commission, Glenn Pasewicz, commission staff and David Hutchinson, PSBA’s appointee to the commission, on the results of their study and work.

Film Screening: PERSONAL STATEMENT with director Julie Dressner Penn C89 Sat, November 9, 2019, 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM EST
Location: Zellerbach Theatre, Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, 3680 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104
Please join us for a free screening and panel discussion of PERSONAL STATEMENT. This award-winning documentary film created by a Penn alumna features three inspirational high school seniors who are working as college counselors in their schools and are determined to get their entire classes to college, even though they are not sure they are going to make it there themselves. Screening will be followed by a panel discussion with director Julie Dressner (C’89), cast member Enoch Jemmott, Netter Center founding director Dr. Ira Harkavy (C'70 GR'79), and others. Free and open to the public! (Registration strongly encouraged but not required.)

Webinar: Introduction to PSBA’s Equity Toolkit
NOV 12, 2019 • 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
The equity toolkit supports school entities as they incorporate equity into district practice. This webinar will offer a walk-through of the components of the toolkit, from the equity lens approach to the equity action plan. Participants are encouraged to ask questions and share experiences throughout the webinar.
Facilitator: Heather Bennett J.D., Ph.D., director of equity services
Pennsylvania School Boards Association
Registration URL: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/1261156731797681154
*Note: registration closes one hour prior to the event.

UPDATE:  Second Workshop Added Thursday, November 14, 2019 9:30 am to 3:00 pm: Adolescent Health and School Start Times:  Science, Strategies, Tactics, & Logistics Workshop in Exton, PA
The first workshop on November 13 sold out in less than 4 weeks.  Thanks to recent additional sponsorships, there will be a second workshop held on Thursday, November 14. Register HERE.
Join school administrators and staff, including superintendents, transportation directors, principals, athletic directors, teachers, counselors, nurses, and school board members, parents, guardians, health professionals and other concerned community members for a second interactive and solutions-oriented workshop on Thursday, November 14, 2019 9:30 am to 3:00 pm  Clarion Hotel in Exton, PA. The science is clear. Many middle and high schools in Pennsylvania, and across the nation, start too early in the morning. The American Medical Association, Centers for Disease Control, American Academy of Pediatrics, and many other major health and education leaders agree and have issued policy statements recommending that secondary schools start no earlier than 8:30 am to allow for sleep, health, and learning. Implementing these recommendations, however, can seem daunting.  Discussions will include the science of sleep and its connection to school start times, as well as proven strategies for successfully making change--how to generate optimum community support and work through implementation challenges such as bus routes, athletics, and more.   
For more information visit the workshop website www.startschoollater.net/workshop---pa  or email contact@startschoollater.net

Congress, Courts, and a National Election: 50 Million Children’s Futures Are at Stake. Be their champion at the 2020 Advocacy Institute.
NSBA Advocacy Institute Feb. 2-4, 2020 Marriot Marquis, Washington, D.C.
Join school leaders from across the country on Capitol Hill, Feb. 2-4, 2020 to influence the legislative agenda & shape decisions that impact public schools. Check out the schedule & more at https://nsba.org/Events/Advocacy-Institute

Register now for Network for Public Education Action National Conference in Philadelphia March 28-29, 2020
Registration, hotel information, keynote speakers and panels:

Know Your Facts on Funding and Charter Performance. Then Call for Charter Change!
PSBA PA Charter Change Website September 2019

Any comments contained herein are my comments, alone, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of any other person or organization that I may be affiliated with.



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